<p>Nature of fresh foods. I’m a million percent sure. The passage said that foods lose nutrients over time via oxidation. Therefore broccoli supported this about the nature of fresh foods. Can some1 tell me the question for Europeans contrasting and the one about mammals?</p>
<p>The question that mentioned the artist coming into contact with the style in Britain; was that to show what was popular in that day?</p>
<p>^I don’t believe so.</p>
<p>why was the answer for the africa one that ‘it was part of the background’ or something like that. i looked at all the answer choices and really couldn’t find one i liked eh</p>
<p>Yes, it was part of the natural setting.</p>
<p>It was the only answer that could be 100% correct without making assumptions. That’s why I went with it.</p>
<p>That wasn’t an answer.</p>
<hr>
<p>Consolidated List: 62 out of 67
NO EXPERIMENTAL ANSWERS</p>
<p>Vocabulary:
Chagrin
Unfailing
Fascinated/Prospects
Disingenuous
Trendsetter
■■■■■■/Rancidness
Characterless
Caustic/Obstreperous
Resplendent
Adept/Pantheon
Stigmatized/Vindicated
Superficial/Cursory
Autobiographical
Feigned/Hypocrisy
Proficient/Repertory
Salutary/Unconventional
Conversant
Social
Inconclusive/fruitless</p>
<p>Passages - NO EXPERIMENTAL ANSWERS</p>
<p>Effects of TV on Courts Double Passage
Both authors granted concessions
Both authors drew comparisons
Both authors agree media coverage of courts could be educational
Ill-advised is what Judge thinks the plan proposed by Passage 1
Stage means phase
Common - cameras will eventually become
Two passages disagree on the proportion of issues that are important in televised court
fashion means way
giving a recommendation
the main idea was about use of cameras in court</p>
<p>Story of Africa Passage
Boundaries were part of the natural setting
Landed means arrived
Marked means delineate
Europeans had assumptions of what gardens were supposed to look like
Wonder is tone of sailors
“Story began 500 years ago” amends a previous assertion
Author did not appeal to an authority
Legends fill in for blank areas in map</p>
<p>Storytelling Passage (Short)
Used skills in writing learned as a child
Cadences to imitate natural storytelling i.e. rising, falling</p>
<p>TV Dinners Passage (Short)</p>
<p>Main Idea- to dispel a common misconception
reference to broccoli- provide an example/nature of fresh foods (need more debate on this)</p>
<p>Painter passage
Admiration is tone of author
Unpretentious manner is the style of the painter
Artistic weaknesses are shown by the bad copies of B Franklin
Desire to share knowledge
Decorative style of England contrasted painters style</p>
<p>Dinosaur passage
Unexcited - the authors attitude toward “secrets”
Movement in the ground is similar to movement in the air - Reason for excitement of new discovery
The new discoveries contradicted the computer models
movement of the bird’s feet in the air.
human footprint in wet vs dry soil- provides an example people can relate to to illustrate the point
Dinosaur’s lower their heel first
Scientist’s method: experimentation and extrapolation
Research overshadowed previous interest in mammals
The dry footprints were valuable but not noteworthy
Author explains definition of trace fossil to prevent misunderstanding
Most significant result was a new discovery in dinosaur movement</p>
<p>Adapting Films Passage:
First author was conflicted, second was assertive
Author 1 would disagree because people want to see accurate adaptations
Passage 1 defends a qualified position, Passage 2 rejects it
films shouldn’t simply be judged based on fidelity</p>
<p>NYEM: No, it was only popular in Britain. The answer was something like “different than the artist’s style” because although he visited Britain, even his earliest works never reflected that decorative style. Another choice was “he was taught by _ and _” (the two British artists mentioned in the passage).</p>
<p>What wa the question for more interesting than mammal research?</p>
<p>“Boundaries were part of the natural setting”</p>
<p>^Isn’t that the answer? Or were you referring to someone else?</p>
<p>u guys forgot passage 1 person was unconvinced at passage 2</p>
<p>quick question, why is the author “unexcited” toward the secrets?</p>
<p>because the secrets were “all old hat”</p>
<p>thriller: the next sentence said “this was all old hat” or something along those lines.</p>
<p>oh i see. thanks.</p>
<p>Passage 1 defends a qualified position, Passage 2 rejects it:
Is this the same as the answer i put which read “Passage 1 enthusiastically supports a point that passage 2 mocks”?</p>
<p>^nope, sorry.</p>
<p>Consolidated List: 63 out of 67
NO EXPERIMENTAL ANSWERS</p>
<p>Vocabulary:
Chagrin
Unfailing
Fascinated/Prospects
Disingenuous
Trendsetter
■■■■■■/Rancidness
Characterless
Caustic/Obstreperous
Resplendent
Adept/Pantheon
Stigmatized/Vindicated
Superficial/Cursory
Autobiographical
Feigned/Hypocrisy
Proficient/Repertory
Salutary/Unconventional
Conversant
Social
Inconclusive/fruitless</p>
<p>Passages - NO EXPERIMENTAL ANSWERS</p>
<p>Effects of TV on Courts Double Passage
Both authors granted concessions
Both authors drew comparisons
Both authors agree media coverage of courts could be educational
Ill-advised is what Judge thinks the plan proposed by Passage 1
Stage means phase
Common - cameras will eventually become
Two passages disagree on the proportion of issues that are important in televised court
fashion means way
giving a recommendation
the main idea was about use of cameras in court
Author of passage 1 was unconvinced</p>
<p>Story of Africa Passage
Boundaries were part of the natural setting
Landed means arrived
Marked means delineate
Europeans had assumptions of what gardens were supposed to look like
Wonder is tone of sailors
“Story began 500 years ago” amends a previous assertion
Author did not appeal to an authority
Legends fill in for blank areas in map</p>
<p>Storytelling Passage (Short)
Used skills in writing learned as a child
Cadences to imitate natural storytelling i.e. rising, falling</p>
<p>TV Dinners Passage (Short)</p>
<p>Main Idea- to dispel a common misconception
reference to broccoli- provide an example/nature of fresh foods (need more debate on this)</p>
<p>Painter passage
Admiration is tone of author
Unpretentious manner is the style of the painter
Artistic weaknesses are shown by the bad copies of B Franklin
Desire to share knowledge
Decorative style of England contrasted painters style</p>
<p>Dinosaur passage
Unexcited - the authors attitude toward “secrets”
Movement in the ground is similar to movement in the air - Reason for excitement of new discovery
The new discoveries contradicted the computer models
movement of the bird’s feet in the air.
human footprint in wet vs dry soil- provides an example people can relate to to illustrate the point
Dinosaur’s lower their heel first
Scientist’s method: experimentation and extrapolation
Research overshadowed previous interest in mammals
The dry footprints were valuable but not noteworthy
Author explains definition of trace fossil to prevent misunderstanding
Most significant result was a new discovery in dinosaur movement</p>
<p>Adapting Films Passage:
First author was conflicted, second was assertive
Author 1 would disagree because people want to see accurate adaptations
Passage 1 defends a qualified position, Passage 2 rejects it
films shouldn’t simply be judged based on fidelity</p>
<p>How exactly was the “secrets” question worded?</p>
<p>what was the attitude of the author towards the “secrets” mentioned in line(whatever line they said)</p>
<p>Is there a list of experimental passages? S can’t remember them already, except that he thought the africa passage was hard.</p>